Sorry to re-open this again but I had a chat the other day with the land owner who happens to be a friend of mine and he confirmed that he removed the foundations of what he called ‘the searchlight’ from the corner of his field at Hambro Hill a couple of years ago.

By B MeldonOn 08/08/2014

Yes Bernard it was quite early as WW2 defences go. In fact as far as I have been able to find out parts of the structures were actually being built at Christy and Norris factory in Chelmsford before the war.

I do not know the date of the aerial survey for the 1939 map, but it could have been quite late in the year.

There is some more information on the following web page including a distant photo of one of the lights when new in 1939 at Benfleet:

Brian, My memory says the site was nearer to Hambro Hill road than the map shows (somewhere in the garden of the present bungalow), but it was a long time ago. I'll ask an old friend of mine whether he can remember more. If it is the object shown on the map, then that suggests that our government was preparing to defend our skies from intruders in more ways than simply radar pretty early on. However I wonder it it was a water tower, perhaps similar to the one in Thundersley that can be seen from the A13. Such towers are necessarily on the tops of hills, and there is, of course, a more ornate one in Benfleet. I also seem to recall that we at Love Lane School were told that a young boy died in the sandpit - a boy drowned at Battlesbridge Mill after becoming stuck in the mud.

By Bernard de NeumannOn 20/01/2014

I have not measured it myself but I would say the structure at Kit's Hill is about 50 feet in diameter in total.

Now as it happens, surprisingly I think the Hambro Hill structure is possibly shown on the 1939 O/S map:

The following old-maps link(s) used to work but are now broken due to a commercialisation decision by old-maps. If you want to see the equivalent free-to-view maps at low resolution go to the old-maps website and navigate to the relevant location and map type (RDCA-Admin).

If so it was in the corner of the field behind the modern houses in Hambro Close that were built in the large back gardens of the houses fronting Hambro Hill.

Was this the location of the structure that you saw in 1948-50?

If so it is also shown at about 50 feet in diameter on the map and the site has not been built on, but is in a field.

By B MeldonOn 14/01/2014

Brian, Thanks. Can you give any details of the size of the installation at Kits Hill please? The one at the top of Hambro Hill was on the north-side of the road, where there is a bungalow now. It occupied a flat area scooped out from the sand. On the south-side and to the east of the railway line, in the old brick manufactory, was an ammunition plant.

By Bernard De NeumannOn 12/01/2014

Update: I went past the site at North Fambridge on Saturday 11th January 2014 and the structure still survives.

By B MeldonOn 12/01/2014

I can indeed shed some light on what this structure was, if you pardon the pun!

It was one of 50 such installations in this part of Essex constructed in late 1939, early 1940.
There was originally a very powerful arc light mounted above and in the middle of each of the structures with 12 large mirrors around it to reflect the light upwards.

The intention was to literally light up the sky and make any enemy aircraft visible with the additional benefit of blinding and disorientating the air crew.

The system was completed and tested but although it was very effective at lighting the sky it was also found that the light was so bright it was reflected back by any cloud cover and would light up the surrounding area as well making it a well defined target for any enemy bombing and even worse actually help the German bomber crews with their navigation at night!

There is one civilian report of one of these sites being bombed minutes after the first test! Following the test the project was abandoned and the central part with the light was dismantled from each site but the outer steel structures remained, I guess that some of the mirrors could well have been broken when this was done.

They were generally located away from built up areas or any military installations. Although the structures were built out of lightweight steel, and obviously not made to last, the very rusty remains of the last one thought to survive may still be in existence at Kit’s Hill in North Fambridge. It was there in 2008. Here is a link to the location on Google maps:

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